Under Lenin the Central Committee functioned like the Politburo did during the post-Stalin era, as the party's leading collective organ.
He also was a committed Marxist who directed the criticism of those who deviated from orthodoxy in the post-Stalin era of Khrushchev and Brezhnev.
Survival under Stalin forced him to hone strategies of public compromise and private disassociation, but he carried those strategies into a post-Stalin era that required them less.
Soviet trade changed considerably in the post-Stalin era.
Most of these date from the post-Stalin era and the styles are often named after the leader then in power (Brezhnev, Khrushchev, etc.).
Another positive aspect of the post-Stalin era in Estonia was the regranting of permission in the late 1950s for citizens to make contact with foreign countries.
In post-Stalin era, the importance of the port continued to increase, as it provided the shortest connection to the seaports of Russian north-east.
Before then, he was a radical composer living under the Soviet regime, testing the new freedoms of the post-Stalin era by experimenting with serial and chance music.
As part of the changes in the post-Stalin era, a collective leadership was established with both Georgy Malenkov and Nikita Khrushchev vying for control.
Initially a hardline Stalinist, he gradually became more moderate in the post-Stalin era.